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Open today D. 22/2: kl. 11-16

Guided tours today

No guided tours today

Admission fee

Adults: 90 kr.
Children & under 18: Free
Students: 50 kr.

The Artists’ Colony in Faaborg

Towards the end of the 1880s an artists’ colony emerged in the town of Faaborg, in Funen, southern Denmark. Fritz Syberg, Peter Hansen and his sister Anna, Syberg’s wife, came from Faaborg and both men returned home after completing their art education at Kristian Zahrtmann’s progressive, anti-establishment school in Copenhagen. Faaborg Museum has a strong connection with this artists’ colony, one of the most important in Denmark.

These Funen-born artists have acquired the rather pejorative reputation of ‘peasant painters’ (bondemalerne) as they made art which self-consciously distanced itself from urban living. Similar to other artists’ colonies in the late 1800s the ‘Funen Painters’ looked for an alternative to city life by setting up an art practice and a community based on both ‘art’ and ‘life’. They wanted to connect their art with the countryside and with everyday life and they created an overall vision for a ‘lifestyle’ reflecting their artistic ideals.

Artists’ Colonies

Skagen Museum in northern Jutland, Denmark is another example of an artists’ colony connected with a museum. This museum was founded in 1908 in the dining hall of the town’s Brøndum’s Hotel. The painters Michael Ancher, P.S. Krøyer and Laurits Tuxen served on its first board of directors. There are also some parallel examples of artists’ colonies in Germany: Mathildehöhe, near Darmstadt and Worpswede, near Bremen have similar establishments founded for artists and art.

Faaborg: a Painters’ Town

The catalyst for the foundation of the Faaborg Museum by its patron Mads Rasmussen was the existence of an artists colony in the town. In his speech at the 1910 opening of the Museum Rasmussen highlighted his own as well as the artists’ association with the town and its surrounding landscape:

this small town, as you know, lies in the middle of the lush, beautiful, Funen countryside… The town is ideally situated to be the centre for showing work by the Funen Painters who have excelled in Art, and where the foundations for this idea have now been laid in Faaborg…

Some of our painters were born in Faaborg, and some others are connected with the town, so this town is absolutely top-notch, a painters’ town.

Faaborg Museum is something quite special. Built to house works by the Funen Painters – and a complete work of art in itself comprising painting, sculpture, architecture and furniture design. The Museum is an architectural gem and the ‘Faaborg Chair’, which was created especially for the Museum, is an iconic piece of Danish modern furniture design.